captcha

A security feature, as on a webpage, that attempts to distinguish between legitimate human users and bots by requiring users to perform a mildly challenging task such as deciphering distorted text.

Origin of captcha

Acronym ofc(ompletely) a(utomated) p(ublic) T(uring test to tell) c(omputers and) h(umans) a(part) coined in 2000 by the researchers who developed the security feature and intended to suggest a colloquial pronunciation of capture

captcha - Computer Definition

In 2000, Luis von Ahn, Manuel Blum, and Nicholas J. Hopper, affiliates
of Carnegie Mellon University, and IBM’s John Langford coined this term, which
stands for “Completely Automated Public Turing
test to tell Computers and Humans Apart.”
The test, administered by a computer, is different from the original Turing
test, which is typically administered by a human. It is a kind of
challenge-response test whose purpose is to ascertain whether a particular user
is a human. The test is frequently used to identify human users and block
computerized applications when signing up for some forms of Internet accounts.
An example of this use is to block spammers from automatically setting up email
accounts with free, public email services. The test involves the recognition of
a distorted image of letters, often with the inclusion of some obscure sequence
of numbers or letters.

(Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart) A category of technologies used to ensure that a human is making an online transaction rather than a computer. Developed at Carnegie Mellon University, random words or letters are displayed in a camouflaged and distorted fashion so that they can be deciphered by people, but not by software. Users are asked to type in the text they see to verify they are human.
CAPTCHAs were created in response to bots (software agents) that automatically fill in Web forms as if they were individual users. Bots are used to overload opinion polls, steal passwords (see dictionary attack) and, most popular, to register thousands of free e-mail accounts to be used for sending spam. CAPTCHAs were designed to circumvent non-humans from performing such transactions.
The Battle of the Bots and CAPTCHAs
After CAPTCHAs were deployed in 2001, the felonious bots were updated to analyze the distorted text, enter the correct text and thereby render many CAPTCHA styles ineffective. In an ongoing battle between the bots and the CAPTCHAs, the CAPTCHA text is increasingly more distorted and camouflaged, often making it difficult for humans to decode.
Other approaches have been incorporated to validate humanness; for example, displaying several images and asking what object is common among them, such as a tree or dog. Or, a phrase might be displayed and the user is asked to re-type a word; for example, "Enter the second word in the phrase." See reCAPTCHA, dictionary attack and Turing test.

Type the Word You See

In this early CAPTCHA example from Carnegie Mellon, a random word is camouflaged, and users are asked to type what they see. (Image courtesy of Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science, www.captcha.net)

More Obtuse, More Random

CAPTCHAs are increasingly more distorted in order to fool the bots, and real words have given way to random letters and digits. However, just like virus writers, who learn to code their programs more effectively, so do the bot writers... a fun-loving, creative bunch.